By: Alissa Muller ‘13
Published on
Aquinas senior, Kendra-Marie Garcia, has been diving deep into the world of biology
this summer. Working on two different projects, Garcia is busy researching and experimenting
with salmonoid and zebrafish populations. She is doing everything from isolating to
mutating to deleting genes found in these populations to test the affects that these
genes have on the fish and what this could mean for humans as well.
Last year, Assistant Professor of Biology, Dr. Rob Peters, asked a few students if
they would be interested in conducting summer research. As a biology major, this interested Garcia and she decided to apply. She had to fill out a questionnaire
and provide a submission of previous academic performance. Peters is happy that Garcia
applied. “In class, she demonstrated her great interest in biology and immunology.
She also demonstrated many skills required for conducting a successful research project
in molecular biology. I was lucky that she was available and interested in participating
in the project,” Peters said.
Garcia and Peters have been working on two research projects this summer. Peters previously
worked on a project dealing with Renibacterium salmoninarum, a gram-positive bacterial
fish pathogen. Garcia is helping him continue this research.
Renibacterium salmoninarum causes bacterial kidney disease, which in turn causes mortality
in wild salmonoid populations. This directly affects ecological restoration and commercial
production. Garcia and Peters are working to identify and target virulence factors
and then delete genes that contain these factors by using homologous recombination.
“This may lead to an attenuated strain that could possibly be used as a vaccine for
salmon against bacterial kidney disease (BKD),” said Garcia.
Garcia’s main research project, though, is on a project presented to Peters by his
colleague from graduate school, Dr. Del Cid. “Our main focus this summer was to isolate
and mutate the genes of two immunological proteins found in zebrafish. NOD1 and NOD2
are receptors that are a part of the innate immune system and help detect the presence
of bacteria,” said Garcia. “Mutations in the human form of these proteins may result
in different forms of irritable bowel syndrome (IBD) such as ulcerative colitits or
Chron’s disease. With these DNA constructs, our collaborator wishes to explore the
possible role of microbiota on the development of the immune system.”
Peters has been available to help Garcia, prepare her for research and answer any
questions that she has but he found that she is capable of doing much of the research
on her own. “I helped Kendra get started with the research project by teaching her
a bit about the big-picture relevance and importance of the work, the concepts associated
with the techniques we would employ, gave her many papers to read related to the project,
got her the supplies she would need and setting her up with a great collaborator.
After giving Kendra an introduction and showing her how to do a few things in the
lab, she works very well independently,” Peters said.
The project has had its challenges but Garcia and Peters have developed a positive
attitude even when things do not go as planned. “We have faced many hurdles and road
blocks, but based on my experience in a molecular biology lab, that is very typical.
I'm very excited about what we've accomplished and where the project is going,” Peters
said.
Garcia began research on May 20 and will continue researching throughout the fall
2013 semester as an independent study. She is appreciative of Peters’ guidance throughout
the research projects. “Dr. Peters has helped me a great deal through the entire process,”
said Garcia. “He demonstrated the various techniques I would need to use and gave
me helpful tips when I was first trying them out. He also prepared me for the high
failure rate that comes with research. Research is very different from class in the
fact that things usually don’t work out as expected. It has helped me to learn how
to troubleshoot and seek advice when something doesn’t go according to plan.”
Garcia will present her research at the Mohler-Thompson poster, the West Michigan
Regional Undergraduate Science Research Conference, and the Aquinas Student Research,
Scholarship, and Creative Activity Symposium.